Thanks Sam, and also your family and the system that have probably played a part in making you a knowledgable and excellent teacher. Wish you all the best for great work!
This video comes at the right time as i am having a exam in this part and surly i will understand very well from you thanks alot God bless you in Ramadan
Hi Sam, how often have you seen people who has one articulate surface at talocalcaneal joint having pronated foot type that limited the foot supination range of angle? Thank you
I have terrible dorsiflextion and can't keep my heel on the ground when I squat. I was told to try putting an elastic cable around my talus anchored to somthing so I could over come my joint restriction. Here to see if it checks out.
Thanks,i have a problem i had an accident and my fit was totaly twist i had to feet it back whn i saw it,but i have a an open wound just at the top of the medial maleodus ,is hard to heal, no dislocation ,no pains but my ancle do shift at medial maleodus ,could it be becos of the deep open wound? Pls reply
Is type 1 callogen present in the knee as well. I’ve had pain in my knee for a few months and just when I think it’s healing the pain comes back. I’m trying not to use it by limiting my walking but some days it’s fine and others it’s not. I’m just wondering if the same thing is happening that you explained about the ankle to my knee. Thanks in advance.
Hi i Hope this message finds you well have questions regarding LLD limb lengthening discrepancy and the surgery of shortening the long bone shall i asked here or email you or Download the app and ask for their Thanks
I sprained and broke my left calcaneofibular ligament by stepping on ice on sidewalk when running (straight laterally inversed). X-ray showed that a tiny piece of the marliolus bone's tip was pulled off by the over stretched ligament. It recovered well after >a year. But instead of becoming weaker the site became bulkier by tissue healing. So the ligament may be actually stronger than before if the extra tissue is an integral part of the ligament rather than some non-weight bearing connective tissues.
Hiya ,im only a month in from the trauma of a trimalleolar fracture. Having never broken a bone ever before How are you doing now?? I have another 5wks of none weight bearing which is hell.
@@paulinemanifold436 I fell off a stile (keen rambler) and broke my fibular in two places. This was in May 2021 when I was 62 years old. Had it fixed with ORIF surgery. The bones mend quite quickly - I was weight bearing by the end of July. But, just as Sam said towards the end, the ligaments take a lot longer! Even now I don't have full ankle movement back - it's fine for walking and rambling - but dorsiflection and plantarflection are limited - which makes walking uphill a little harder. Physio is key, and plenty of exercises for proprioception. Hope you are healing well - you will get there 😀.
Thank you for this video! I'm trying to understand the ankle motions as it relates to the golf swing. I think of how the wrists need to articulate and I'm trying to get the understanding of how the ankles articulate in my world the ankles feel like they are facilitating the body turning but also resisting the body turning sort of like a rubber band. Now I don't know if technically that's inversion e-version but it definitely feels like a rotational type of move? Is it possible that that's just a combination of the motions and it feels semi-circular but it's actually just inversion e-version? Doesn't the mortise and Tenon let the ankle rotate? When you referring to the talus being where the Pig goes into with the talus allow a rotational movement?
Ballet Injuries - There many. I once hyper plantar flexed my foot rolled over on it and broke 2 bones. the injury was named after some doctor -I have forgotten his name. A lecture on ballet injuries to the foot and ankle might be interesting
I am so happy I just found this channel. I could have SWORN that I knew what the body was but I am very excited to run through this channel's videos thanks so much Sam!